The civilian years



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Jon Thompson took special pride in his receiving the title of “Director of Cultural Affairs” for the city of Memphis. Among the projects on which he worked was “Wonders: The Memphis International Cultural Series.” He used his strong skills as a manager to convince other nations to send their best artifacts to Memphis for exhibitions on Napoleon, Imperial Tombs of China, and the Titanic. He wrote: “I remember having a six-month battle with French curators about my wanting an enlisted man’s armor chest plate with a cannonball hole through it, that I found hidden away in the archives of the French Army Museum at the Invalides. They said Napoleon did not touch it, did not wear it and it was in disrepair. I finally prevailed after paying for conservation. It turned out to be the most talked about artifact in the show, which included Napoleon’s cradle, death mask, Marshal’s batons, and the carriage in which he escaped from Russia. The chest plate simply illustrated the end of an empire, the futility of war, the price paid by commoners, etc. In exit interviews, it was identified as the most important object shown, including the painting by David of Napoleon Crossing The Alps.”217

As he pursued his many interests, Jon remained connected to the U.S. military. He became involved in the Military Affairs Committee with the Memphis Chamber of Commerce and in the Defense Orientation Conference Association. The latter gave him the opportunity to be with President Reagan at Pointe du Hoc on the 40th anniversary of D-Day, spend three days with the Contras at a base camp on the Nicaraguan border, visit Tiananmen Square and “troop the line” of one of the Chinese divisions involved with the incident a few days before it occurred, and head a delegation to Santiago, Chile, when Augusto Pinochet turned the government over to civilians. Jon also was appointed to the Board of the National Defense University Foundation and was especially proud of his helping initiate a significant program in which foreign officers met average Americans on their home turf. He wrote: “They stayed with families in Ripley, Tennessee, on Election Day and ate BBQ and catfish. On other trips they went to the Caterpillar factory and visited a 5000 acre wheat farm run by a family of five. They spent a night with the Los Angeles police department, went to J.R. Ewing’s home of the TV show ‘Dallas,’ and visited Yellowstone Park.”218 Jon hosted groups of foreign officers in his home in Memphis for several years.


PUBLIC SERVICE ORGANIZATIONS

We also contributed to public service organizations. Mike Connor ran an international non-profit organization for helping children for six years.219 He wrote: “I retired in 2003 to found a nonprofit, ‘The Global Wealth Initiative’. Our focus was on helping children around the world, especially those at the bottom of the economic rung. We implemented scholarships for many children who would otherwise never see the inside of a classroom using some very innovative techniques like paying parents to insure their daughters went to school. I did this until 2009. We never took a cent for administration, travel, etc. I paid for all of that out of my own pocket. Every dollar we raised went to help the kids (including ‘Make a Wish’ in the U.S.). My wife Joyce wrote a children's book ‘Michael and Mr. B.’ All the proceeds went to the Global Wealth Initiative.”220 After working with “The Global Wealth Initiative” for six years Mike returned to the corporate world.

After retiring from the Army, Dan Christman served as President of the Kimsey Foundation in Washington, D.C. from 2001 to 2003. He then became Senior VP for International Affairs, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, also in Washington, from 2003-09.221 In this position he served as Chair of the Coalition for Partnership with India, a 60-member assembly that sought passage of the U.S.-India Civilian Nuclear Agreement. He also led the U.S. section of the U.S.-Iraq Business dialogue.222 As part of his responsibilities with the U.S. Chamber, Dan led “numerous” trade delegations to the People’s Republic of China and met with senior Chinese officials as part of a broad effort to help American companies, in Dan’s words, “navigate the difficult Chinese market place.” The visits also sought to counter some of the “negatives” that existed in the bilateral relationship. Dan believed, as he said in one of his speeches, “How the U.S. and China accommodate to each other’s new roles this century is our nation’s biggest long-term strategic challenge.”223

Wes Taylor served as President of the George C. Marshall Foundation.224 Under his leadership, the Foundation sought to perpetuate Marshall’s legacy through scholarship, leadership and statesmanship programs. It also sought to provide facilities (including a museum and research library) that offered a wide range of resources and materials for use by the general public, scholars and students.

Bob Wolff served for ten years as the Executive Director for the Society of American Military Engineers (SAME). Starting with a staff of 14 and a budget of $1.8 million, Bob grew the organization’s staff to 28 and a budget of $7.5 million. Bob explained, “SAME headquarters had not produced and directed any conferences or continuing education when I arrived--we now have a substantial portfolio of conferences and continuing education which provide great opportunities for professional development and business development to our membership, which includes over 1,600 small and large companies doing business with DOD.” As an example of his contributions to engineering education, Bob wrote: “As the Chair of the Education Committee, SAME, I worked with the Head of the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the U.S. Air Force Academy to initiate a one-week Engineering and Construction Camp for high school students. It was held for the first time in 2000 with volunteers from the local area and around the country. When I arrived at SAME HQ as the Executive Director, I worked with volunteers to expand the program, which now has a Seabee Camp at Port Hueneme, California, an Army Camp in Vicksburg, Mississippi, and a Marine Corps camp at Camp LeJeune, North Carolina. The camps now host 210 high school students who are interested in studying engineering at a college or one of the Service Academies.” At a special celebration of his ten years of leadership, Bob was recognized for “improving the future of military engineering by taking the helm of the SAME and changing it from a local and regional ‘club’ type organization to a national, and even international, engineering organization.” Bob’s efforts helped the SAME to “improve engineering relations between government and contract engineering firms, provide ‘practical’ solutions to tough engineering problems and also to mentor the next generation of emerging leaders.” 225

After retiring from the Army, Bill McKemey worked for six years as VP of Store Operations for Duron Paints and Wallcoverings and then became VP and COO for Volunteers of America (VOA) Chesapeake. He noted: “I liked the ability to combine the practice of business with the ethic of service.” Similar in mission to the Salvation Army, VOA is a national, faith-based, human-services organization. Revenue came through contracts with various levels of government and from Medicaid reimbursement for services provided. He wrote: “When I first became the CEO, the financial house had to be put in order.... Making sure we had the cash to meet payroll was the first priority. Having to do more with less in the face of ever-increasing costs (particularly health care) and never-increasing contract amounts was always our greatest challenge. Attracting and retaining good people is always difficult in the not-for-profit sector. It was always frustrating not to be able to pay our employees more. Last among the top three challenges was the seemingly never ending string of baseless allegations from folks who saw the corporation as having unlimited resources to be shared with them. We spent a small fortune on legal fees as did our insurance carriers to protect ourselves from an amazing array of scams. We never lost a case, but the amount of resources expended was shameful.”226

Despite such challenges, Bill found great satisfaction in his work. He wrote: “Being a CEO of a non-profit, human services organization, to me at least, combined the best of all worlds. One got to lead a business with all of the functions and requirements attendant thereto; but there was also a mission to be performed. If I did my job, the care givers throughout the organization got the tools they needed to take care of their charges. At the end of each day, many people were in a better place because of our organization."227 And, one should add, they were in a better place because of Bill’s talents and efforts.

After a career in which he made numerous contributions on highly classified government programs for intelligence and electronic warfare, Manny Maimone’s full potential was cut short by Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), often referred to as Lou Gehrig's Disease. In an act of selflessness, he used his progressive disability to help a non-profit project at the University of Virginia, known as “Eye-gaze Response Interface Computer Aid” (ERICA), which sought to design and develop a computer controlled solely by eye movement. His wife Carol said: “Manny fought ALS with every ounce of energy he could muster but never lost his sense of humor or kindness. He spent many hours researching and trying to help others until he was unable to talk or even use his eye-gaze computer. We feel we must continue the fight for others with ALS, especially since this disease has been linked to military service and Manny was a veteran.” Manny’s family continued the fight by participating in various fund-raising activities for research in ALS and care for those suffering from the disease.


HUMAN SERVICES

Our classmates often put their skills, talents, and experience to work for something larger than themselves. Preston Hughes wrote: "In 1992, I retired and returned to my home in Kosciusko, Mississippi. A couple years later I ran for state senator and lost. During the campaign I noticed that black-white communication among males in my town and in the area where I campaigned was still just about nil. No blacks in the local Lions or Rotary Clubs. I met with an elderly black man in our town who was widely respected by blacks and whites for his role as an assistant principal during school integration. I asked if he'd be interested in starting a civic men's club with meetings modeled after Rotary/Lions Club meetings. He said he would be. We started with five white men, five black men, met monthly for dinner in same restaurant/room where the local Rotary and Lions Clubs met. Members joined two-by-two, one black and one white. Our membership grew to 34, still evenly divided. Many of the men had known each other most of their lives but had never been friends, had never sat down to have a meal together or to discuss issues of interest/concern locally (e.g., school-related issues, local wage scale issues, local business development issues). The mayor was a member, also the high school principal and several businessmen, black and white. Most of the white members were either Rotarians or Lions."

Preston continued, "Each year, for our annual meeting, we invited prominent Mississippians to come and speak. Several former governors, an attorney general, state supreme court justice and others came and spoke. Our wives attended the annual meetings. We got to know each other's wives, learned about each other's families.... We never had a program directly about race relations. Topics we discussed were the same topics addressed at Rotary or Lions Club meetings. But our time together, the opportunity to get to know each other, to ask questions of speakers and hear answers together contributed a lot to the good race relations that Kosciusko enjoys. There are still no blacks in the Kosciusko Rotary and Lions Clubs."228

One classmate who made a special effort to help others was Joe Anderson. Joe wrote: “Over the course of my career in the Army, at General Motors and as an entrepreneur, I have often been on the leading edge of initiatives and opportunities in the African American community. For example, being the first African American aide de camp in the Army (actually twice). Or one of the first two Black plant managers in General Motors. Or the first member in my private country club in 1990. Or the first African American Holding Company that owned and controlled six operating companies. In owning these companies, I put African Americans in leadership roles...that they might not have had elsewhere. And I subsequently launched new African American entrepreneurs by selling four of these companies to the individuals who were operating them for me and thus having the opportunity to expand wealth creation in the Black community. One of those individuals who purchased three companies from me in 2011 had over $1 billion in revenue in 2012.”

“I spend a lot of time mentoring people,” Joe wrote, “who are referred to me because of my track record and reputation. I speak on various panels at workshops, etc. I just completed a two-year stint on the Manufacturing Council of the Department of Commerce as Chair of the Council. The purpose of having the 25 companies on the Council is to make recommendations to the Secretary of Commerce on how to grow manufacturing in the U.S. Ironically, my White House Fellow assignment (1977-1978) was with the Department of Commerce.”229
RELIGIOUS SERVICES

Many of us were deeply religious, and some of us made important contributions to religious organizations. Several classmates faithfully served their churches or synagogues. Ernie Knoche began his service as a pastor in a Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod, in Houston, Texas. His next church was in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he served for 24 years. After retiring he became “interim pastor” at King of Kings Lutheran Church Mission in Jasper, Georgia.230

John McCullough wrote: “After coming to West Point in 1961 as a devout young Southern Baptist, I have been for 35 years a Presbyterian minister whose theology is radically liberal. That transformation began as I interacted with roommates who were the first Catholics I had ever known personally, and was introduced to a more liturgical style of worship in mandatory Protestant chapel services. It continued as Mary and I attended a United Methodist church while I was in graduate school in engineering at UC Berkeley in the early 1970s. Resigning my commission in 1976, I entered Vanderbilt Divinity School, where I encountered an emphasis on the social justice aspect of Hebrew-Christian faith that provided a meaningful response to profound questions which first arose for me out of the Vietnam experience, plus an intellectually rigorous approach to theology that fit well with my scientifically-oriented prior education.”

John continued, “I was ordained in 1979 as the pastor of Woodland Presbyterian Church, a 150-year-old congregation in inner-city Nashville whose membership had been in decline since 1950 and did not bottom-out at less than 100 until about 15 years ago. My greatest achievement over those 35 years has perhaps been simply keeping the congregation alive. In doing that, however, I have guided Woodland Presbyterian toward becoming a place where persons of somewhat traditional Christian faith can worship and work alongside others whose faith perspective can best be labeled agnostic if not atheist--as they share a deep commitment to social justice, a great concern for ecological issues, and the desire for an intellectually honest theology. While ‘honor’ and ‘country’ are no longer as important to me as they once were, ‘duty’ definitely is--albeit now in a very different context."231

Neil Brown wrote: “I worked for the Bell System, retiring from AT&T in 1998 as the Regional Director of Service Costs and Prices for the nine state Southern Region. Just four years earlier in 1994, I had joined the First Baptist Church of Woodstock (FBCW), Georgia where I became a Deacon and then Chairman of Deacons. While in that capacity, God called me into full time vocational Christian ministry. When I retired from AT&T, the Senior Pastor invited me to join his Senior Staff. FBCW is a large church of some 16,000 members and has a staff of over 160 people. I am blessed to be on the 10-man Senior Staff where I have served as Minister of Evangelism, Minister of Missions, and now serve as Minister of Pastoral Care where I have a 15 person staff.... I am very blessed to serve with Dr. Johnny Hunt, Senior Pastor, who just completed two years as President of the 16 million member Southern Baptist Convention and is a great expository preacher.”232

Ben Whitehouse retired from the Army in 1985 and worked for nine years for AT&T as a Program Manager in “Black Projects.” He then worked for NCR Corporation as a Professional Services Partner and then as a Consultant for Lucent Technologies. In 2002 he became the business manager for St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Raleigh, North Carolina. He wrote: “Presently, Gladys and I work for our church of 5,000 families having an impact on people in a very different way than my military/industry experience, but the things we learned as cadets--Duty, Honor, Country--still ring true.”233

Eddy Dye became a dentist and had a private practice in Memphis and Townsend, Tennessee, for 24 years. In the summer of 2007 he and his wife Kathy went on a mission trip to the Dominican Republic. He wrote: “While there I honestly felt the Lord impress upon me to sell my practice and serve Him during the time I have left. Twenty-five years before we had volunteered on a Lakota reservation in South Dakota. I never got it out of my system. Every two to four years, for 20 years, I would call the reservation to see how the clinic and folks I knew were doing. But Kathy absolutely refused to go there....until that day in the fall of 2007 when the Lakota asked me to come back. I hung up the phone and Kathy said, ‘Let's go!!!’ We moved to the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation, lived in a ghetto, stayed four years and loved it. During that time I served as the Chief Dental Officer and interim pastor of the First Baptist Church of Eagle Butte.”234

Our classmates also became missionaries overseas. In 1998-1999 Jack Blau took a leave of absence from his teaching at the middle school level, and he and his wife did missionary work in Cameroon, West Africa.235 They later returned to Cameroon as “hostel parents” for about a dozen teens who were children of missionaries and who attended the Rain Forest International School in Yaoundé.236 Bob Anderson and his wife also worked as missionaries in Cameroon. After retiring from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (USDVA) in April 1995, Bob and his wife entered Foreign Mission Training in June 1998, studied French in Besançon, France, in 1998-1999, and worked for four years in Cameroon. They served as foreign missionaries in the Evangelical Lutheran Church Hospital and Clinics in the Central Highlands of the French-speaking country. Bob returned to Africa in 2006 to work in Liberia and mentor the director of the Curran Lutheran Hospital. He again returned to Liberia in March-June 2010 to serve as acting director of a 225-bed hospital northeast of Monrovia.237

After retiring from the Army, Jim Long and his wife moved to Hawaii and enrolled in the University of the Nations for training with Youth With A Mission (YWAM), an interdenominational, international, evangelical Christian mission. After further training in Asia, Jim and his wife moved to Germany and settled first in Frankfurt and then in Berlin where they worked with the German branch of YMAM, Jugend Mit Einer Mission. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, they worked for about two years with German churches to expand support for Christian churches in the former East Germany.238

Our classmates also contributed to the management of religious institutions. From 1998 until 2006 Tom Barron served initially as a consultant to the CEO of Episcopal Church Pension Group and then became COO. When asked about the highlights of his civilian career, Tom wrote: “Leading a highly successful turnaround of the Church Pension Group's seven businesses, from a point in 2001 where two of them were near bankruptcy and the others were floundering badly, to recaptured market share, a state of sound profitability, and high levels of client service to the 100 dioceses, 6,500 parishes and 30,000 individual customers of the Episcopal Church.” Tom’s contributions to the Church Pension Group also included a “comprehensive technology transformation” that enabled it to compete and perform effectively.239 Like many of our classmates, Tom never lost his sense of service to higher ideals.


SERVING OUR VETERANS

We also served our nation’s veterans, including service as volunteers. Kent Brown volunteered to be a Disabled American Veterans driver at the Boise, Idaho, Veterans Affairs (VA) medical center. He emphasized the great satisfaction he got from the volunteer work and from his being able to share “war stories” with the veterans he has helped.240 After working in the Department of State as a Foreign Service officer, Ken Moorefield became Director of the Vietnam Veterans Leadership Program.241 Ron Floto and Denny Coll were board members of the Chicago Vietnam Veterans Leadership Program, and they, along with Ron Layer, participated in the dedication of the Chicago Vietnam Veterans Memorial on November 11, 1983.242 John Mogan was a Commissioner in the Tennessee Department of Veteran Affairs.243 He was sworn in as Commissioner in August 2002 by Deputy Governor Wendell Gilbert, who had been his F-1 Tactical Officer and who had sworn him in as a second lieutenant in June 1965.244

Duncan MacVicar wrote: “In my retirement, I am working to improve the way that veterans returning from war with mental illness like PTSD are treated by society. As part of that work, I authored a bill improving upon California's alternative sentencing law for troubled veterans who commit crime. It passed the legislature unanimously and was signed into law. I count this as one of my crowning achievements, and it occurred after retirement! Goes to prove that we can continue to contribute to society even as we age.”245

While serving in Vietnam, Phil Harper’s spine was crushed by a collapsing bunker. Yet, he did not feel sorry for himself or wallow in grief, and he became a role model for all of us in his refusal to view himself as a victim. After earning a law degree from the University of Miami and enjoying a new Corvette, he threw himself into improving care for veterans; his passion became an organization called the Paralyzed Veterans of America. The existing system was stumbling, if not broken: drugs in hospitals, insufficient and poorly compensated staff, insufficient resources, weak service ethic. Along with other veterans, he worked especially hard from 1974 to 1976 to establish a comprehensive national service for paralyzed veterans. He fought for additional prosthetic specialists in VA hospitals, additional funding for prosthetic research, and national legislation to benefit disabled veterans. All of us were proud of his absolute refusal to surrender to his disability.

We also served in Veterans hospitals. Terry Carlson wrote: “In 1980 I went to training in the new diagnosis of PTSD and began doing trauma work with WWII, Korean, and some Vietnam vets. The Vietnam vets had been shunned, in some cases, so they had not come to the VA for many years to seek help for their war-related symptoms. I was the only psychologist and the only one doing PTSD trauma work [in the VA hospital in Columbia, Missouri]. My experiences at West Point in military history allowed me to relate to the WWII and Korean vets, and my own service in Vietnam with a 105 howitzer battalion, including Tet of ‘68, also gave me instant credibility with the Vietnam vets. The clients’ belief that the therapist understands their experiences and feelings is the key factor in their recovery, and I was able to give that to the many vets I saw over the years.” Terry worked as a staff psychologist, became Chief of Psychology Service, and then returned to being a staff psychologist. He wrote: “By the time I retired, we had 14 psychologists providing a variety of services to our veterans. It was a privilege to serve them.”246



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